A mobile communication system based on digital content including images and video that may be acquired, processed, and displayed using a plurality of mobile device, smartphones, and tablet computers. The system enables a variety of priority of systems for interactions between the devices including network servers, wearable devices and appliances. The priority of systems includes various wireless communication of data and telephony between devices.
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1. A system comprising:
a wireless device that comprises a display, a wireless transmit and receive component; a telephony module; wherein a camera on the wireless device is enabled to acquire one or more images of food;
wherein the one or more images of food are displayed on the wireless device;
wherein the wireless device is enabled to provide food related information to a user of the wireless device based on a recognition of the one or more images of food;
wherein the wireless device is further enabled to exhibit recipe data; and
wherein the wireless device is enabled to display health related data.
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The present application is a continuation of co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/856,372, filed on Dec. 28, 2017, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/629,467 filed on Feb. 23, 2015, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,870,716, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/751,049, filed Jan. 26, 2013, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,965,460; the present application claims priority and incorporates by reference in the entirety each of the afore mentioned patent applications.
Intelligent Electronic Glasses is abbreviated as IEG.
Near Field Communication is NFC.
Processing, compute, storage, and communication capabilities are often found at traditional endpoints such as mobile devices or cloud networks. There is a need for distributed computing power to be available in a plurality of devices and network enabled devices. The ability to have computing, storage, and communication capabilities distributed via a plurality of local devices and body level devices may be enabled via new wireless device form factors that may be wearable, small, disposable or integrated into larger devices.
The disclosure generally relates to smart glasses, smart watches, smart bands, and other wearable devices that may be used standalone or in conjunction with a mobile device, wireless network, or remote cloud server infrastructure.
This disclosure generally relates to a plurality of multimodal and multifunction input and output mobile device including intelligent electronic glasses. It is an attribute of the present disclosure to enable mobile devices, advanced smartphones, cellular telephones, tablet computers, smart goggles, intelligent electronic glasses, cameras, smart projectors, smart watches, smart headgear, smart headphones, smart headsets, smart necklaces, smart earrings, and other accessories to provide digital media content acquisition, presentation, and interaction. These mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headset may allow for continuous and always-on acquisition of audio, image, video, location, and other content using a plurality of input methods including images sensors. Further, the mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headset may display content on a variety of displays and surfaces.
It is an aspect of the present disclosure to enable image based communication between mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headset, distributed image sensors, stationary devices, and servers by wired or wireless communication means.
The mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headset may enable device or server control including gesture control, eye control, in-air control, retinal control, facial control, and other user interface activities for a variety of electronic devices. In this system, image sensors may be integrated into various mobile devices. Image sensors may also be coupled to a variety of traditional non-electronic devices. As an example, a camera may be integrated into a pair of sunglasses and a display may be affixed to the lens or area proximate to the lens of the glasses. Communication between the mobile devices/intelligent electronic glasses/headset and other devices including Internet or network servers may be completed using wireless transmit and receive radios integrated into the devices.
It is an embodiment in the system to have intelligent electronic glasses or headsets configured to be worn on the body. These intelligent electronic glasses or headsets may be enabled with the full or partial functions previously resident on a smartphone or stationary electronic device. The intelligent electronic glasses may leverage the processing capability of a smartphone or a local or network server and continuously acquire, transmit, and receive digital content.
The intelligent electronic glasses or headset may comprise a full set or subset of these components including: processor; multicore processor; graphics processor; display; high definition display; LCD, LED, see thru LED, see thru mirror display, see thru LCD/LED mirror display or other displays; dual displays for each eye; keyboard; projected keyboard; on screen keyboard; programmable buttons; microphone; noise isolation or noise cancellation; speakerphone; in-ear speaker; digital still camera; digital video camera; front facing camera; back facing camera; side facing camera; eye tracking camera; high definition (HD, 720p, 1020p) camera; light/flash; laser; projector; infrared or proximity sensor; vibration device; LEDs; light sensor; accelerometer; gyroscope; x-y-z positioning; GPS; compass including solid state compass; memory such as flash memory; buffer memory; power sources; battery; rechargeable battery; multiple data and video input and output ports such as audio, ethernet, USB, firewire, 1394, VGA, or HDMI; wireless transmit and receive units such as Bluetooth, WiFi (802.11a,b,c,n,x), Cellular (GSM, Edge, CDMA, others); transmission protocol software such as TCP/IP; one or more antennas including antennas fitted into the frame of the glasses; operating system; software such as image recognition software; access to an software application store; smartphone/tablet, server, cloud, or desktop synchronization software; audio, pictures, and video streaming software; Internet configuration; UI command and control such as gesture control, retinal control, face and expression control; lens; fingerprint resistant lens; replaceable lens; see thru lens; filters; audio and video playback; and various other components. Components may be integrated into ASICs, integrated housing, separated components, or swappable components.
The mobile device may comprise a full set or subset of these components including: processor; multicore processor; graphics processor; display; high definition display; LCD, LED, see thru LED, see thru mirror display, see thru LCD/LED mirror display or other displays; dual displays for each eye; keyboard; projected keyboard; on screen keyboard; programmable buttons; microphone; noise isolation or noise cancellation; speakerphone; in-ear speaker; digital still camera; digital video camera; front facing camera; back facing camera; side facing camera; eye tracking camera; high definition (HD, 720p, 1020p) camera; light/flash; laser; projector; infrared or proximity sensor; vibration device; LEDs; light sensor; accelerometer; gyroscope; x-y-z positioning; GPS; compass including solid state compass; memory such as flash memory; buffer memory; power sources; battery; rechargeable battery; multiple data and video input and output ports such as audio, Ethernet, USB, firewire, 1394, VGA, or HDMI; wireless transmit and receive units such as Bluetooth, WiFi (802.11x), Cellular (GSM, Edge, CDMA, others); transmission protocol software such as TCP/IP; one or more antennas including antennas fitted into the frame of the glasses; operating system; software such as image recognition software; access to an software application store; smartphone/tablet, server, cloud, or desktop synchronization software; audio, pictures, and video streaming software; Internet configuration; UI command and control such as gesture control, retinal control, face and expression control; lens; fingerprint resistant lens; replaceable lens; see thru lens; filters; audio and video playback; and various other components. Components may be housed in various integrated ASICs, integrated housing; separated components, or swappable components.
A watch may comprise a full set or subset of these components including: processor; multicore processor; graphics processor; display; high definition display; LCD, LED, see thru LED, see thru mirror display, see thru LCD/LED mirror display or other displays; dual displays for each eye; keyboard; projected keyboard; on screen keyboard; programmable buttons; microphone; noise isolation or noise cancellation; speakerphone; in-ear speaker; digital still camera; digital video camera; front facing camera; back facing camera; side facing camera; eye tracking camera; high definition (HD, 720p, 1020p) camera; light/flash; laser; projector; infrared or proximity sensor; vibration device; LEDs; light sensor; accelerometer; gyroscope; x-y-z positioning; GPS; compass including solid state compass; memory such as flash memory; buffer memory; power sources; battery; rechargeable battery; multiple data and video input and output ports such as audio, ethernet, USB, firewire, 1394, VGA, or HDMI; wireless transmit and receive units such as Bluetooth, WiFi (802.11x), Cellular (GSM, Edge, CDMA, others); transmission protocol software such as TCP/IP; one or more antennas including antennas fitted into the frame of the glasses; operating system; software such as image recognition software; access to an software application store; smartphone/tablet, server, cloud, or desktop synchronization software; audio, pictures, and video streaming software; Internet configuration; UI command and control such as gesture control, retinal control, face and expression control; audio and video playback; and various other components. Components may be housed in various integrated ASICs, integrated housing; separated components, or swappable components. The watch may function as a second screen or “n-th” screen device for another display such as a smartphone or television.
The cellular telephone, glasses, watch, and other electronic devices may communicate with each other and with local or network servers.
The glasses can be used to take a single picture, a series of pictures, or full motion video, HD video through the use of a camera that is mounted on the housing of the glasses frame or integrated into the lens. In the integrated camera model, the camera electronics may be integrated into the frame of the glasses and the lens of the glasses is used as the lens for the camera. Image and video data can be wirelessly uploaded to a remote server or alternatively stored locally on the glasses.
In another aspect of the invention, the glasses may project text on to a physical object.
In another aspect, the intelligent electronic glasses may record an individual touching of an object and classify the object in a data and the object is connected to various meta-data including location, time of day, temperature, proximity to people and other factors.
In another aspect, the intelligent electronic glasses may present in a first lens an advertising or product purchase placement that is viewed in the second lens.
In another aspect, one lens of the intelligent electronic glasses may display all of the prior history associated with an object, such as how many times that object was touched, whether the product is under warranty or not, what the current price of the product is on a used market, what the price of the product.
In another aspect, the user can access an inventory database consisting of all objects in the room or loaned out to a third party. This information may be displayed on the mobile device including intelligent electronic glasses or watch.
In another aspect, a user can trace whether an object is broken based upon how many times an object was used by that member. As an example, an older child may blame this on the younger child if he is accused of breaking something. A camera may record usage of a device, store the history of this usage, analyze the usage, and present recommended view periods of the potential breaking incident.
In another aspect, one lens can browse the internet and the other lens of the glass can present image, video, or text.
In another aspect, the glasses can change from one tint to another to decrease exposure to the eye.
In another aspect, the glasses have a wireless transmit and receive radio built-into the device for continuous and real-time streaming to a local or network server.
In another aspect, the wire frame may be configured as one or more antennas for one or more wireless radios.
In another aspect, the glasses record conversations and auto playback for repeating conversations and agreements of conversations. This may be useful for auditing of contracts, agreements, or events. Alternatively, it may be useful in recording a person's life events.
In another aspect, dual cameras may be used simultaneously. For example, one camera may take a picture and the other camera may acquire video while a microphone captures audio. Alternatively, multiple cameras may be used simultaneously to provide a 360 degree experience. Alternatively, one camera may be a 3D camera.
In another aspect, the camera may work in conjunction with the specific displays on the mobile device, glasses, or watch. For example, a user may select to activate a rear camera so that it is displayed in the left or right lens.
In another aspect, the camera can provide magnification of content by allowing for a zoom function. This may be useful in experiments and thereby obviate the need for a microscope. It may be useful in the driving context to identify road hazards. It may be useful outside to identify stars, clouds, and other items.
In another aspect, the zoom function is done through interpolation thereby providing optical and digital zoom capabilities.
In another aspect, glasses include a micro-projector so that they can display content on to a hand, wall, or pavement.
In another aspect, the projected content may be obtained in real time from another set of glasses, video, internet site, or stored media on a server.
In another aspect, a first camera on the glasses captures movement and the second glasses captures movement so as to provide a touch like interface without a surface.
Alternatively, a sensor may send a light pulse to gauge the distance between the hand and the projected image so as to identify where contact was made on the projected image.
Alternatively, a sound may sound may be used to detect distance from the hand to the glasses or may be used to track the send and receive of the signal.
Alternatively, a laser may be used to track and identify gestures.
Alternatively, the glasses may leverage the processing power resident on a second device including a cellular phone, watch or other mobile device.
In another aspect, content acquired from the glasses may be displayed on a TV, watch, or mobile phone.
In another aspect, the glasses may include a flash for pictures or a light and may be integrated into the device or be an attachment.
In another aspect, the resolution of the images may be modified using various lenses varying distance between the eye and the lens or other approaches.
Alternatively, a mobile device may be used and may display on the screen images acquired from a separate camera such as those on a pair of glasses where the images are annotated with content acquired from an internet server or local object. In turn each object may broadcast using RFID or other means information about itself to glasses, phones, server, or other devices. This RFID may be a label and can affix it to other devices.
Alternatively, the label may be a bar code or other image. This label may be a physical or virtual label and may include a barcode or other identifier. A table stored on a server or other device may map the label to data about the object. An owner, gifter, seller, or other person or system may create a data table including object location and other meta data, including purchase data, purchase price, ownership, useful life, willingness to sell object at an offer price. The data set may also pull in real time data including current price used on various exchanges. These objects may be automatically placed on an internet auction for immediate sale. A user may set an aspiration price including for family heirlooms. This obviates the need for the owner to manually post these items on an online exchange.
A user may then use their interface component such as glasses or mobile phone to assess the value of all objects within a home or environment.
The camera mounted on the glasses, smartphone, vacuum cleaner, or other robot may automatically scan home environment. For example, a robotic vacuum cleaner of a hotel may constantly scan a room to determine whether any objects are missing. This map of objects and paths may also be posted to an Internet server or database.
In another embodiment, a user may move an virtual object in a display and have the object move in the physical world by a robot. For example, a chef may move virtual images of objects such as a tomato and a robot may move the tomato in the physical world. This may enable remote cooking for elderly people or friends.
In another embodiment, it may be that one eye or multiple eyes may be impaired. The display may alter resolution, magnification, and other factors by lens to compensate for physical deficiencies.
In another aspect, the mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headset/watch may be able to convert spoken audio to text in real time and post the information on one or more displays. As an example, a conversation may appear in the left lens of the glasses as a person is speaking. In the right lens, a set of conversation topics or Internet search terms related to the spoken content may appear.
In another aspect, distance may be measured by modifying one lens and another lens to focus on different focal areas.
In another aspect, a camera at the top of the glasses may zoom in on a hands and a projector may display an image of a keyboard so as to allow typing on the air. A laser may be used to track the gestures. Alternatively an inward facing camera may be used to track eye movement to understand the focus areas of the individual and map these focus areas to the gestures or control activities.
In another aspect, eye-tracking may be enabled on a camera focused on an individuals eyes. This camera may be integrated into the intelligent electronic glasses. Alternatively, it may be a second camera on a mobile phone. This may be used to measure advertising effectiveness such as when an individual watches television or when an individual walks down a street and sees billboards.
Alternatively, eye tracking may be used for fatigued drivers and they may measure pupil dilation, eye strain redness and other factors to assess exhaustion and the potential of falling asleep at the wheel. Alternatively, the glasses may measure physiological problems for medical diagnosis such as glaucoma and cataracts.
In another aspect, the glasses may be used for gaming including scavenger hunts or other activities.
In yet another aspect, the mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headset may be used to control actions in a different area. As an example, a person may be at the office and wish to control appliances at home. The display may show the inside of the person's house and allow the individual to make gestures such as turn off and on lights in the virtual reality view. These actions and commands may be recorded by mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headset, sent to a server, and in turn sent to a home server or the home device to implement the action. This may allow full home automation and control using the mobile devices/intelligent electronic glasses/headset from remote locations.
The glasses may be part of a network and allow a first individual to take control of another person's glasses. Glasses may be identified by IP address or another unique numeric or alphanumeric ID. In this instance, a user or system may login to the glasses device, update configurations and software, and change the camera acquisition activities and display. As an example, an individual wearing glasses that enters a retail store, may not find a retail store employee to help with a purchase. The store may allow for virtual retail assistants or avatars that can be activated on the display of the glasses or external display. This may allow for automated sales without the need for people. Other payment mechanisms including RFID, NFC, and cloud based storage of credit card information may be used to allow for immediate purchases of products.
In yet another embodiment, digital content may be recorded, streamed, or viewed on a time lapsed basis.
In yet another embodiment, objects and items may be automatically tagged with location, context, purchase, and other related data. For example this may aid a person in identifying where the person left their keys. Information about the last known location of the keys may be automatically recorded by the camera or tagged by the device. This content may be indexed and searched. Alternatively, it may allow a person to run a search query such as identifying all the items in house that were touched.
In yet another embodiment, various statistical, behavioral, and predictive models may be built based on the large or big data obtained from the input devices. As an example, a prediction function may suggest to a concerned family member the likely activities of a relative. Alternatively, a prediction may be made by a server on which types of people tend to look at certain objects and which types tend to ignore certain objects. This could be helpful for a real-estate ad-network.
In yet another object, the mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headsets and distributed camera arrays may be used as a security system. Multiple people may opt their devices into a centralized sharing server that may be searched and used for various predictions. This may be helpful in identifying erratic behavior.
In yet another embodiment, various micro-expressions and emotions may be detected by the facial expressions of a person.
In yet another embodiment, a camera may perform lip reading to understand spoken words when audio is not available. This may enable a person wearing intelligent electronic glasses to read the lips of a person far across a room.
Example: Variants of Glasses
In yet another embodiment, the glasses may be manufactured with various versions that account for design, cost, weight, brand, and other factors. One variant of the glasses may include a full helmet or goggles which provide a housing to encompass additional processors, memory, wireless radios, antennas, cameras, GPS, multiple displays, microphone, speakerphone, and battery. Another version off the glasses may only require a low-power processor, battery, memory, camera, Bluetooth, and WiFi radio without a display. Yet another version may be sold with a display. Other versions may be sold with various protocols.
In another embodiment, multiple displays may be provided targeted at both the left and the right eye.
In yet another embodiment, the lens may be split into a multiple areas, where one area may comprise an display, such as an LCD display, and a second area may be clear to provide traditional viewing. In one instance this may be a bifocal lens where one area of the lens is an electronic display and another area of the lens is a traditional non-electronic lens.
In another embodiment, the device may include an over the ear clip, microphone, in-ear speaker, battery, and display configured to wrap around the forehead and positioned in front of the left or right eye. This item may include a rotatable hinge located above the over the ear component to allow for the display in front of the eye to be moved up or down. It is anticipated that the electronics including sensors and memory will continue to improve in efficiency and capabilities so as to increase the features offered in a smaller lighter package.
In yet another aspect, the functions of the glasses may also integrated into earnings, headsets and necklaces. These devices may be configured with one or more antennas, one or more wireless or wired transmit and receive radios, one or more processors, one or more buttons, one or more cameras, one or more lasers, one or more microphones, one or more speakerphones, one or more touch or non-touch screen displays, a miniaturized projector, battery, and power input and output.
In another variation of the glasses, the glasses may be configured with multiple cameras including a front facing camera and a back-facing camera.
In another variation of the system is for the glasses to be configured with replaceable frames and lenses. It is another variation for the lenses to be configured with varying levels of polarization. The polarized may enable the frames to reduce glare. These polarized lens may have a variety of filters associated with them. The filters may be integrated into the lens. Alternatively, the frames may be equipped with several lenses that may be attached to the device simultaneously. A lens may be moved from an active position and rotated 90 degrees up to an inactive position. Alternatively, a lens may be configured with multiple filters.
In yet another embodiment, a contact lens may be configured into an electronic contact lens enabled with a display, transmit and receive component, antenna, and micro battery. The battery may be charged or the lens transmission may be powered by natural fluid movement in the eye or by blinking the eye.
In another variation of the glasses, the polarization may be modified by physical replacement of the lens. The glasses may provide an easy pop-in and pop out of the lenses. Alternatively the frame may also be easily replaceable, where the side frames of the glasses may be affixed to the center frame of the glasses using screws or clips.
In another variation of the glasses, the polarization may be modified by a physical dial on the glasses. Alternatively, the polarization may be modified automatically using a light sensor integrated into the glasses, a CT/MD, a watch, or other proximate or remote device.
In another variation of the glasses, the polarization may be modified by a cellular telephone or mobile device. An application configured to run on the cellular telephone or mobile device may present various settings to the control the glasses. The application may provide various configuration settings for a user to manage their glasses. As an example, the application may provide a calibration setting where the CT/MD, glasses, watch, or other device captures the ambient light including wavelengths, and appropriate determines a filter to apply to the glasses.
In yet another embodiment of the lenses, the may be configured with anti-reflective lens or progressive lens and other glare reduction means.
In yet another embodiment, the lens may be include prescription lens or sunglass lens.
In yet another embodiment, the lens may be configured with a wide field of view.
In yet another embodiment, reflected light may be removed when displayed.
Example: Glasses for Physical Activities and Sports
It is another aspect, the system may allow for a user to be able to define the activity that is currently being performed and match the filter on the glasses to the activity. As an example, an individual that is playing tennis may desire for the filter to provide more clarity on a yellow tennis ball and the white markings on the court.
In yet another variation the mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headset may be enabled with training specific software. A laser configured on the housing of the glasses, headband, necklace or other external device may be used to assess the speed of objects or people. A laser on the glasses may target a tennis ball. A camera may image the tennis ball. A specialized miniaturized radio transmitter and receiver such as a radar gun including various radar forms could be used to determine the speed of the ball by transmitting a signal focused on the object, measuring the return signal, and calculating the frequency of the signal. The data captured associated with the device may be processed in real time by a local device or a remote server to predict the movement of the object. The predicted position of the object may be used to allow an individual more time to react to the object. For example, the tennis ball may be shown in glasses in a virtual representation as being closer to the individual than in the physical world so that a user may react more quickly to the ball if the user is shown to be responding slow to the tennis balls. Alternatively, the perception may be a calibration setting that can be configured on the glasses, a CT/MD, or a server. The speed of the ball may be displayed on the glasses, a CT/MD, posted to an Internet web page, or stored on a server.
In yet another embodiment, the mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headset may also be used in other sports such as golf In this embodiment, a camera may image the golf ball, stroke, and distance of the ball from the tee.
Alternatively, the mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headset may be used in a football context where the ball may be measured for the appropriate spin, speed, and distance. In yet another embodiment, a biker may use the mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headset while biking on city streets or through nature. In this embodiment, the glasses may identify cars around the biker. The mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headset may further provide a speedometer, acceleration, and various other statistics about the movement of the individual.
Example: Transportation and Glasses in Moving Vehicles
In yet another variation, the intelligent electronic glasses may be used in a car. The glasses may image the cars in front, on the side and/or behind the vehicle that an individual is presently in. The glasses may send the data to the CT/MD for further processing, a watch, wireless processor enabled necklace, server located in the car, or a remote server. The glasses may acquire the images of the vehicles in close proximity to the current vehicle, measure the speed of the neighboring vehicles, and track the trajectory of the vehicle. If a vehicle is moving closer than predicted by the system to the present user, the glasses may present a warning indicator on the screen of the classes; a spoken audio through the speakerphone of the CT/MD or car; a vibration of the phone or the glasses. A camera may further be integrated a car vehicle on the top and/or sides of the car. These images may further be sent to the displays in the car, on the mobile device, or the intelligent electronic glasses/headset.
The glasses when used by a driver may also be a tool to give feedback on the driving experience, potential for road hazards or incorrect driver behavior. The glasses may image the road ahead of the vehicle. The images may highlight potholes, sharp turns, obstructions in the roadway, animals, and other objects. The glasses may send the images acquired using the camera to the CT/MD or server for further processing or the glasses may optionally be configured with a higher end processor to perform some level of processing. The CT/MD may assess the danger of the object such as a pothole and suggest a corrective action to the driver. The corrective action may be a synthesized spoken audio command indicating the action to take or it may be a visual message that appears on the lens of the glasses or projected from the glasses onto the windshield of the car.
In yet another embodiment, the mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headset may be enabled with thermal imaging capabilities or with radiation scanner which identifies radiation such as terahertz radiation. This may be used by TSA personnel to scan a person in an airport or by local police to scan individuals in a crowd for illicit objects.
Example: Electronic Earnings, Necklace, and Shoes
In another embodiment, a variety of other items including earrings, necklaces, and shoes may be enabled with electronic components to provide I/O and control. Alternatively, a camera and microphone may be clipped onto a shirt or object to capture images and video.
In another variation, a see thru LED, LCD, or other type of mirror may function as a display.
Example: Location Positioning Using Networks and Cameras
In yet another variation, a camera network may continuously capture data about people, objects, and environmental factors. As an example, a location of an individual may be obtained by a reading from image and facial recognition of an picture obtained from a camera.
In yet another variation, the song and music information may be shown in the display. A song played in a coffee shop may be recognized and the meta information about the song may be shown in the display of the glasses or mobile device.
In yet another embodiment, the mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headsets may be used in academic or science environment. This may allow a student to use the camera as a microscope or telescope.
In yet another embodiment, the mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headsets may allow for complete video acquisition of an event and then subsequent replay of that event. For example, a person with the camera may record a full 360 immersive show and then allow the show to be replayed on another display in real time or time shifted. As an example, a music concert may be recorded using the mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses and then replayed later. Alternatively, meta data about the songs and the concert may be added in real time. Content may be magnified or zoomed in.
In yet another embodiment, a person wearing the mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headset may have a room automatically imaged. In this situation, the people may be recognized either by the spoke audio using voice recognition or facial recognition. A list of all the people and social data about the people may displayed on a screen or the lens of the glasses. The system may further suggest conversation topics for each person in the room.
In yet another embodiment, a person's activities may be automatically posted to a public or private web pages, social network, data storage server, or synchronized across devices.
In yet another embodiment, the mobile device/intelligent electronic glasses/headset may be used to scan and ISBN, QR, barcode, or recognize an image of a product based on the design or label and provide reviews, ratings, comparison shopping data, or other information about the recognized product.
In yet another embodiment, an advertiser may be able to bid on all the advertisements associated with a specific person's view in the intelligent electronic glasses.
In yet another embodiment, a person wearing the glasses may patch in avatars, images, and objects into the environment. As an example, absent family member may be patched in for dinner. The person may be connected to an audio of that individual or pre-recorded messages from the individual. These pre-recorded messages may have been obtained from a database or recorded audio.
In a related embodiment, a camera may scan a person's iris for retinal data and perform a match between the retinal scan and a stored image in a server. The match can identify the location of a user as being proximate to the image sensor that acquired the iris shot. Alternatively, an image or video or related content may be projected on to the retina or displayed in very close proximity to the retina.
In another variation, an accelerometer or pedometer or altimeter integrated into a wearable device, mobile device, smartphone, or cellular phone may measure physical activity including steps taken, distance travelled, and height climbed. This data may be recorded on the mobile device or remote server and graphically displayed in a chart. A CPU or co processor may be used to process the activity data.
Reference will not be made in detail to the preferred embodiments of the system with examples illustrated in the drawings. It will be understood though that the preferred embodiments are not intended to limit the devices, software, and systems as it is intended to cover alternatives.
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The glasses or mobile device may connect to a recipe exchange in which individuals may charge for their recipes and set prices for a person to buy the full rights or partial rights to the recipe. An appliance such as a 3D printer may be used to enable the production of the recipe.
The glasses device may be coupled to a shopping list application or an inventory management system such that once the recipe is chosen the glasses will display the ingredients you will need, the current inventory, or the ability to place an order for the delivery.
In yet another embodiment, the smart glasses may be enabled such that it can scan a pantry, fridge, or freezer in your kitchen. In turn the glasses can read or scan the label, QR code, bar code, or image recognize the food items and ingredients in the kitchen and store said data in a local or cloud memory.
The glasses or recipe application stored in a non-transitory computer readable medium or other wireless device may suggest various items based on the current availability of ingredients for a chosen recipe. Relatedly, the glasses application may suggest a different recipe based on the ingredients it scans or based on some observed cuisine preferences.
The glasses device may further suggest specific preparation methods including the size the vegetable or meat to be cut, how long an item needs to be thawed or heated, and the appropriate preparation time and cooking time.
Process of Cooking
Glasses display will give instructions to start cooking. As each item is added to the pan, display will change the color as it goes to the next step of the recipe. The cooking pan's handle or the lid could have sensors connected to the glasses which can indicate the amount of time each ingredient needs to cook and will send signal to the glasses in the form of a pleasant bell sound when cooking is done. The sound part could be optional. Glasses then would display the next step until all the steps in the recipe are completed.
The glasses device may further display when a pot 804 is left unattended on the stove if it is about to burn the contents with a loud buzz. The glasses may determine when the stove was turned on based on viewing the start of a flame on the pot and subsequently not viewing the flame being extinguished. In turn the device may suggest to the individual via various notifications to turn off the stove. The pot 804 may be enabled with various displays 806 and sensors 808 to measure cooking time and wireless access.
In yet another embodiment, a novice cook may be enabled via the smart glasses, to ask an expert chef to watch the cooking process from a mobile device such as phone, watch or a mobile device including tablet and give real-time or time lapsed suggestions. This system may further be connected to a delivery system wherein recipes and ingredients and full meals un prepared may be delivered.
In yet another embodiment, the glasses may calculate the calorie and the nutritional values of the food prepared in conjunction with a smart phone app. The glasses may continuously screen the food consumed by an individual and analyze the food content based on the size of the morsel, consistency, transparency, and other factors. This may further enable an individual to keep track of daily calorie intake and nutritional value will help in healthy diet and glasses will help in maintaining a healthy weight management.
In yet another embodiment, the smart glasses may aid when one goes to the grocery store. At the checkout counter the smart glasses can keep track of the items bought and stored in a kitchen pantry. Glasses can indicate if there is enough room in the pantry or fridge to store them.
In yet another instance, the glasses device may be used to directly image products and invoice the customer directly in the grocery store.
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A different format for the glasses is displayed in 1408. These glasses have a camera 1407 and a LCD, LED, high zoom, or other type of display 1408. This display may be of varying sizes such as a square 1 inch by 1 inch display, longer widescreen display, or smaller or larger displays. The display 1408 may be fastened to a 1409 band, frame plastic item or another material and further connected to the frame 1411 of the glasses or wrapped around the ear or neck of an individual. The band may contain additional electronics 1410 including a processor, memory, antenna, battery, and wireless transmit and receive radios and control the display 1408. This approach may allow a traditional pair of glasses to be retrofitted with intelligent electronics. Items 1407, 1408, 1409, 1410 may be built-in to the glasses or detachable from the glasses. Alternatively, items 1407, 1408, 1409, 1410 may be used as a headset and without the glasses.
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The glasses 1701 may further be enabled with a microphone. The audio captured from the microphone may be automatically converted from spoken audio to text using the processing power resident on the intelligent electronic glasses, a mobile device, or a local or network server. The text of the audio conversation may be shown as translated in the display. This may be valuable for individuals that are hearing impaired. Further, as words are translated, content may be dynamically searched on the Internet or another server to provide related information to the spoken audio. This search and relation may be performed automatically or manually and may be predicted using behavioral models. These behavioral models may suggest related conversation topics or perform internet searches during the conversation. For example, when a new person is encountered, the audio system may recognize the voice of the person or the camera may recognize the face of an individual and identify the person using a database located on a social network. Further, the device may automatically search keywords from the conversation and present results in the display 1705. A user may browse the internet and use spoken commands to control the display. Various commands may be available in one or more toolbars 1703 and 1706. Content in the display may further be updated dynamically based on the context including location.
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The glasses may further be used in a shopping experience. Offers and coupons may appear in the display 1805, 1806, and 1807. Advertisers may bid on space on the lens in real time using real time bidding exchanges and platforms. Advertisers may also make bids to offer discounts, deals, and coupons based on the location of the glasses and the object being viewed. In
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Drivers in manned aerial vehicle including low-altitude aerial vehicles may also use the mobile device/intelligent electronic devices/headset for navigation signs, road markers, and lane markers. The line markers may controlled by a traffic server or central transportation server such that augmented and virtual road signs can be displayed in regions above the air. This may allow aerial vehicles to travel on freeways above land based vehicles. Various vehicles including manned aerial, unmanned aerial, self-driving, ground based vehicles may further contain a server coupled with wireless transmit and receive capabilities to notify and negotiate traffic, lane changes, and driving with other local cars.
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For example, a location tracking server may capture the routes travelled by an individual and auto-checkin the individual to various stores. Alternatively, advertisers may bid on the routes 2907 for a specific or aggregate set of people based on time of day, demographics, or other factors. Various routes may be suggested to an individual by prediction software resident on a server that accounts for the drivers needs. For example, the driver may seek the shortest time, scenic route, likelihood of finding products/objects that they need to purchase, or ad supported monetization route. Advertisers may bid on these routes. Alternatively, a driver may make money by choosing an ad supported monetization route over a non ad supported route. An ad supported route may take a person through an up and coming district of shops. Traffic and maps servers and data may be used to assist in the routing.
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It is anticipated that the various components disclosed herein including cameras, displays, sensors, wireless T/R may be integrated into a variety of devices and environments. The disclosure herein has applicability to a variety of contexts including travel, transportation, shopping, auctions, banking, emergency services, visually impaired, crowdsourcing, peer to peer communication, video and audio conferencing, education and learning, negotiations and auditing, sports, news, and other domains.
It is further anticipated that various extensions via cases, custom watch bands, custom frame bands, add-ons, software development kits may be created to enable further use cases of the devices and systems disclosed herein. It is further enabled that the devices may be configured to enable fitness, health, lifestyle, voice commands, voice recognition, learning, and gaming activities. In certain instances these add-ons may enable the device to be used with or without a mobile device.
In yet another instance, a watch or smart glasses may be enabled with a payment profile to enable automated billing and self checkout. In these instances authentication for given person may be enabled via the use of various of wearable and mobile devices to prove that an individual is authorized to make a purchase. This may include imaging the individual using a glass device coupled to a ECG sensor from a watch device in further conjunction with a fingerprint reader in a mobile device with a payment profile.
The foregoing descriptions of specific embodiments of the present disclosure have been presented for purposes of illustration and description. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the disclosure to the precise forms disclosed, and it should be understood that many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the present disclosure and its practical application, to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the present disclosure and various embodiments, with various modifications, as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the disclosure be defined by the Claims appended hereto and their equivalents.
Rao, Sanjay K, Rao, Sunil K, Rao, Rekha K
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
Patent | Priority | Assignee | Title |
10777094, | Jan 26 2013 | Airspace Reality | Wireless devices and intelligent glasses with real-time tracking and network connectivity |
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